Book contents
- Bertolt Brecht in Context
- Bertolt Brecht in Context
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figure
- Notes on Contributors
- Chronology
- Abbreviations
- Preface
- A Note on Brecht in English
- Introduction
- Part I Brecht’s World
- Chapter 1 Brecht’s Augsburg Years
- Chapter 2 Models for Epic Theater from the Munich Years:
- Chapter 3 Brecht in the Weimar Republic
- Chapter 4 Brecht’s Emergence as a Young Poet
- Chapter 5 Brecht and Music: The Fly in the Amber
- Chapter 6 Brecht and Political Theater
- Chapter 7 Brecht and Germany
- Chapter 8 “[She] made suggestions. We took them”: Bertolt Brecht’s Women Collaborators
- Chapter 9 Brecht’s Interviews
- Chapter 10 Brecht and Exile
- Chapter 11 Brecht and the German Democratic Republic
- Chapter 12 The Berliner Ensemble
- Part II Brecht’s Work
- Part III The World’s Brecht
- Concise Bibliography
- Index
Chapter 2 - Models for Epic Theater from the Munich Years:
Wedekind and Valentin
from Part I - Brecht’s World
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 May 2021
- Bertolt Brecht in Context
- Bertolt Brecht in Context
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figure
- Notes on Contributors
- Chronology
- Abbreviations
- Preface
- A Note on Brecht in English
- Introduction
- Part I Brecht’s World
- Chapter 1 Brecht’s Augsburg Years
- Chapter 2 Models for Epic Theater from the Munich Years:
- Chapter 3 Brecht in the Weimar Republic
- Chapter 4 Brecht’s Emergence as a Young Poet
- Chapter 5 Brecht and Music: The Fly in the Amber
- Chapter 6 Brecht and Political Theater
- Chapter 7 Brecht and Germany
- Chapter 8 “[She] made suggestions. We took them”: Bertolt Brecht’s Women Collaborators
- Chapter 9 Brecht’s Interviews
- Chapter 10 Brecht and Exile
- Chapter 11 Brecht and the German Democratic Republic
- Chapter 12 The Berliner Ensemble
- Part II Brecht’s Work
- Part III The World’s Brecht
- Concise Bibliography
- Index
Summary
During his time as a young artist in Munich (1917–1924), Brecht’s burgeoning approach to drama and theater was considerably influenced by the playwright and cabaret performer Frank Wedekind and the Bavarian comedian Karl Valentin. This chapter outlines the nature of Brecht’s contact with these two artists and their performance work, and demonstrates how their aesthetic approaches had a significant impact on the development of his epic theater. In particular, it attends to how both artists provided compelling strategies for defamiliarizing material realities and societal oppression. While Wedekind offered enthrallingly deviant protagonists and repurposed popular art forms – cabaret, circus and the Moritat, Valentin’s clowning and fairground style inducted Brecht in the deployment of gestic performance and comic incongruity. What the chapter makes apparent is the extent to which these artists provided Brecht with key models for a subversive theater that recycled old and new, popular and highbrow forms in order to deliver a social commentary that was richly satirical and fun.
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- Bertolt Brecht in Context , pp. 26 - 33Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021